What is the CBA?
What is an SPC?
What is the Salary Cap Hit?
What is the difference between a Salary Cap Ceiling and Salary Cap Floor?
The Salary Cap Floor is the minimum amount of money that a team must spend on player salaries in accordance with the CBA, the salary cap floor for the 2015-16 season is $52,800,000. This floor prevents teams from depleting or trading away the core of their rosters with the intent of sacrificing their position in the league standings for a higher ranked position in the entry draft. This also acts to ensure that all players are compensated fairly. The Salary Cap floor is commonly set around $16-18 million below the Salary Cap Ceiling.
What is a Performance Bonus?
- The player is on an entry-level contract.
- The player has signed a one-year contract and is over 35 years old.
- The player has signed a one-year contract after returning from a long-term injury (has played 400 or more games, and spent 100 or more days on the Injured Reserve in the last year of their most recent contract).
Performance Bonuses are paid to a player if the requirements of the bonus are met, and are given over the course of the season as they are met.
What is the players’ share of the league’s revenue?
When League Revenue is between $2.2 billion and $2.4 billion = 55%
When League Revenue is between $2.4 billion and $2.7 billion = 56%
When League Revenue is exceeds $2.7 billion = 57%
What happens if a player is injured (IR, LTIR)?
While placing a player on the LTIR does not remove the player’s Salary Cap Hit from the overall team cap, it does provide the team relief if the team’s total average Salary Cap exceeds the upper Salary Cap Ceiling. More details are available at the LTIR FAQ.
Once an injured player returns to the team from the LTIR, the team must reduce its average salary cap to below the Salary Cap Ceiling before they may remove the player from the LTIR.
What is the season opening injured reserve (SOIR)?
Full Cap Hit
Players who are on a one-way contract, or players on a two-way contract who accrued 50 or more NHL games in the previous season count fully against the cap hit. Teams can opt to place these players on LTIR to obtain cap-relief (LTIR FAQ).
Discounted Cap Hit
Players on a two-way contract, who accured 1-49 NHL games in the previous season, count against the teams cap hit; however, the reduced cap hit is calculated as follows:
Multiply the players NHL cap hit by the total accrued NHL days in the previous season, and divide by the total number of days in the previous season (Ex: 186 for 2014-15)
When a player is reactivated to the active roster, their cap hit reverts back to the full rate
Full cap relief
Players who did not play any NHL games in the previous season can be placed on SOIR do not count against their teams cap hit.
What is an NMC and an NTC?
A No-Trade Clause (NTC) is less restrictive, and only places restrictions on player movement as a result of trades. A player with an NTC cannot be traded to another team unless the player provides consent. However, player consent is not required for placement on waivers or assignment to minors. An NTC does not follow a player if they waive a full NTC, or are traded within the terms of a limited or modified NTC.
A Partial or Modified No-Trade Clause (PNTC) is less restrictive than a Full No-Trade Clause, dependent upon specific conditions outlined in the players’ contracts. PNTC often include conditions outlined by the player (that may include a list of teams to which the team may not trade the player). Players will often have NMCs tied to their contracts with Partial or Modified No-Trade Clauses. These prevent the team from moving the player via loan or waivers, but give the team some options for trading the player.
Players are not eligible for NMCs or NTCs in their contract until they are eligible for Group 3 Unrestricted Free Agency (7 accrued seasons or 27 years of age). Players may sign contracts with NMCs or NTCs that may become active partway through their contract, whereupon they become eligible for Group 3 Unrestricted Free Agency.
What is a Group VI UFA?
- The player is 25 years or older (as of June 30th of the calendar year the contract is expiring).
- The player has completed 3 or more professional seasons – qualified by 11 or more professional games (for an 18/19 year old player), or 1 or more professional games (for a player aged 20 or older). This can include NHL, minor league, and European professional league seasons played while under an SPC.
- The player has played less than 80 NHL games, or 28 NHL games of 30 minutes or greater for a goaltender.
How do buyouts work?
Is there a maximum number of contracts permitted?
- Total NHL Roster contracts per team = 23 (not including IR)
- Total NHL contracts per team = 50 (including NHL, AHL & ECHL), players in junior leagues who have not played 10 NHL games do not count towards this limit.
- Total NHL players belonging to a team = 90 (including roster, minor, prospects or drafted)
What is a retained salary transaction/trade
- The percentage retained cannot exceed 50 percent of the player’s salary (including all bonuses) and Salary Cap Hit.
- The same percentage must be retained for both the player’s salary and Salary Cap Hit, and cannot be modified.
- All teams are limited to a maximum of 3 retained salary contracts per season.
- Teams cannot retain an aggregate amount of more than 15 percent of the Salary Cap Upper Ceiling.
- Players’ contracts are limited to 2 retained salary transactions per contract.
Once a retained salary transcation has occured, there are various limitations, such as:
- A team cannot reacquire a player whom they have retained salary from for a minimum of one year after the date of the transaction, or unless the player’s contract expires or is terminated prior to the one-year date.
- All teams involved in a retained salary transaction will have cap implications if the contract is bought out or terminated.
- Teams who retain salary on a players contract, will have the full value of the cap hit act against the teams salary cap total, regardless of whether the player is reassigned to the minors by their current team.
What is a Buried Contract?
The players salary cap hit, minus the sum of the minimum NHL salary for the respective season and $375,000, still counts towards the team’s salary cap total.
The cap hit relief is therefore equal to the minimum salary of the respective season + $375,000:
- 2014-15: $550,000 + $375,000 = $925,000
- 2015-16: $575,000 + $375,000 = $950,000
- 2016-17: $575,000 + $375,000 = $950,000
- 2017-18: $650,000 + $375,000 = $1,025,000
- 2018-19: $650,000 + $375,000 = $1,025,000
- 2019-20: $700,000 + $375,000 = $1,075,000
- 2020-21: $700,000 + $375,000 = $1,075,000
- 2021-22: $750,000 + $375,000 = $1,125,000
How do Entry-Level Contracts Work?
The length of the entry-level contract is also dependent on the player’s age:
- 18-21 years of age: 3 years
- 22-23 years of age: 2 years
- 24 years of age: 1 year
Entry-level contracts can still include signing and performance bonuses. Signing bonuses may not exceed 10 percent of the contract’s total compensation, and is paid to players annually. Performance bonuses for entry-level contracts, that are paid by the team and count against the salary cap cannot exceed a maximum of $2,850,000. Performance Bonuses are broken into 2 categories: Schedule A and Schedule B. Schedule A Bonuses may not exceed $212,500 per individual bonus, and $850,000 in total. There are two types of Schedule B Bonuses. League-wide award/trophy bonuses that are paid by the league and are not captured within the actual entry-level contract signed by the player, and player & club agreed upon bonuses, of which the maximum is $2million per season.
What is an Entry Level Slide?
Players who sign at 18 years old are eligible to have their contracted extended for 2 seasons. This extension does not apply if the player turns 20 between September 16 and December 31 in his signing year. Signing bonuses do not slide, and are paid to the player regardless of a slide, this causes the annual average of the players contract to change, and therefore the cap hit decreases for this player.
What is a 35-plus contract?
The 35+ rule was introduced in the 2005 CBA and was intended to prevent teams from burying veteran players in the AHL, or from front-loading contracts to draw players to signing with them. One result of the rule is that it has lead to teams signing short one or two year contracts with veteran players, to prevent the possibility of being stuck with the players full cap hit if they are injured or unable to produce.
On a related note, over the previous couple years there has been significant confusion as to whether a buyout does or does not receive a cap benefit for 35-plus contract. The most recent understanding is that bought out 35-plus contracts do not receive a cap hit benefit, as is explained by Michael Russo. More details on this are available at the Buyout FAQ